I think music isn't just to gain a mate, but also for humans to work together as a unity Fundamentally all branches of culture are reflections on humans need to communicate and connect with each other, and I think it's connected to our way of survival. Empathy with someone else is our way to gain help from our neighbours to survive, and the more social skills you have the more benefit you have to survive. We simply realized that one person can not achive everything, so to connect with someone else we invented arts and entertainment to keep us together in larger groups. We created culture to survive
Dr. Robin Dunbar goes into this but also the "radical anthropology" work of Professor Chris Knight, etc. - they have a youtube channel. Also check out Dr. Erich Jarvis for his vocal learning model and auditory learning. Finally I just did an upload on this. thanks
Watched this months ago on 'flix.. watched it again before bed-- it's that motivational to musicians & the recording-arts crowd. Blessed to work with/on audio-processing
Sent here after loving the "I Wish I Could" video.. I always loved TOKIMONSTA, but just listened to her music, had no clue about her somewhat recent ordeal.. She is amazing and I am so happy for her recovery from some scary stuff
I have the same disease as Jennifer. I had the same surgery as she did but only on my right side. I lost all sense of music as well for about music. It was an odd sensation for sure and I thought I was alone in this experience until I saw this documentary two months post surgery.
This Documentary is so emotional idk why but the vibes the voiceovers all made me kinda emotional. @netflix can ya'll do a Documentary about frequencies? For example the 432 Hz tone, that would be mad nice.
I remember when I watched Tom 10 seconds in real life (Not in the Adam Sandler's movie) and he couldn't remember a thing for more than 10 seconds but he could play and remember a 2 or 3 minutes song, that proofs how beautiful and powerful music really is :)
quite a few mistakes in this. 7:16 - the audio is a "harmonic minor scale" but the animation shows a 'phyrigian' scale, which is not what we hear. the scale we heard would have both the second and seventh lines move to be at the same level as the major scale. also using a harmonic minor scale is not a great example if you're trying to objectively show the difference between major and minor sounds, a "natural minor" scale would accomplish this better since you don't have to change any notes(using the "relative minor'). 9:02 - Major isn't nessecarily associated with "happy feelings." It has a *brightness* to it but that doesn't nessecarily translate to happy. take for example the a section of duke ellington's 'caravan,' which chills on one (major) C7 chord. You'd probably think of it as "suspenseful, dramatic, eerie" rather than 'happy.' But it is still thought of as *bright*. Just one of the many ways chords can work, and always depends on the broader context. 10:20 - the last 2 notes quite noticeably rise, the animation shows them as falling. the animation also shows each note falling as lower than the previous, but the note is repeated. 10:23 - the Beatles and Bob Dylan basslines are not the "exact same bassline" as the example you depicted before. it falls in semitones, rather than diatonically within the key, like Hit the Road Jack and Lamento della Ninfa do. But love the video, 'specially the evolution discussion.
Adam Neely doesn't know the secret reason why birds don't have relative pitch. I answer this in my new upload. I like Adam but he's mind controlled by Western music tuning. haha
Who else couldn't focus on what the people were saying as they were getting into all the tunes too much 😂😂. Like seriously, any constant beat or nice melody lures me in. And that raindrop thing at the beginning, I was hearing music like 3 seconds in.
i just got a rescue puppy, i was looking for a name . I am totally naming him Oscar. Its hard to find inspiration but Oscar is a classic name for a smart Dachshund name.
What about Hazrat Inyat Khan's quote from "The mysticism of music & the power of the word"?. "Rhythm, when of an eve nature, can be felt by every living thing". I guess that means they can feel the rhythm but not react to it IN rhytm
It's not the full concerto - it's the second Andante movement in Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K. 467. This II. movement is known in itself as "the Elvira Madigan theme" due to an excellent Swedish 1967 movie.
megrez 1927, it has not always been same.... light came too late after matter and vibrations but now we need not worry as it’ll always be with us ..illuminate us, enlighten us, evolve us. ॐ असतो मा सद्गमय । तमसो मा ज्योतिर्गमय । मृत्योर्मा अमृतं गमय । (Lead me from the asat to the sat. Lead me from darkness to light. Lead me from death to immortality Om Peace Peace Peace.)
This episode is where I started questioning this series' credibility. The chord progression of The house of the rising sun (you can hear it at 10:08) is not at all the same as the other examples. Neither is While my guitar gently weeps (10:22). These two are almost identical in chord progression (with a slight difference), but not "the exact same bass line" as advertised here. Saying "composer after composer has been using the exact same bass line.." is true, but you didn't get all of your examples right. That's just lazy fact checking, and for a company with your resources, Netflix, you could afford someone who knows music theory to fact check your episodes.
Looking for an explanation of what music is, I find no logical answer. Why? Because we take it for granted. My definition of music is that it is a variation of human speech, vocal or instrumental. That is the part of the brain that processes it. Of course like speech it contains everything in human life, emotions, moods, questions, answers, statements, violence, everything. The current explanations focusses on How this is done, but nor What it is..
Speaking of music.. the theme song of this series is sooooo fine
I have been Looking for an hour long version
Have you found it?
I’ve been looking for it for days!
@@felipevisbal1414 same
@@simonvutov7575 Look further in the comments. I posted the link to the song pf the original creator
I subscribed to Vox exactly for this series. Kudos to Netflix for financing this
9 mn n hy
W r qe PR 🎉d nor is not m mcnñc 🔥🇧🇩nv uznuyx
Do anyone know the name of the backgroud music in 4:23? I'm searching for hours and can't find it :(
Ludoviajante it’s called realla by tokimonsta ft anderson paak:)
tu aq moço
a msc é top msm
@@MarcosPaulo-tr7mm he asked in English ya know
@@beastv5607 wt?
Guei
Of all the episodes I’ve watched so far; this was the best, for me. Really kept me super invested in the show.
Thank you Netflix for making these quality contents available without an active membership. What a simple way to gain a new paid subscriber. 👍🏾
Two. And this is someone who has resisted the consumerism trend for years.
I think music isn't just to gain a mate, but also for humans to work together as a unity
Fundamentally all branches of culture are reflections on humans need to communicate and connect with each other,
and I think it's connected to our way of survival. Empathy with someone else is our way to gain help from our neighbours to survive, and the more social skills you have the more benefit you have to survive.
We simply realized that one person can not achive everything, so to connect with someone else we invented arts and entertainment to keep us together in larger groups. We created culture to survive
Dr. Robin Dunbar goes into this but also the "radical anthropology" work of Professor Chris Knight, etc. - they have a youtube channel. Also check out Dr. Erich Jarvis for his vocal learning model and auditory learning. Finally I just did an upload on this. thanks
Masterpiece! From Secriptwriting to narration, to sound design and editing... Inspiring work!
Watched this months ago on 'flix.. watched it again before bed-- it's that motivational to musicians & the recording-arts crowd. Blessed to work with/on audio-processing
2:00 If you have listen to the intro theme song again & again. Don't feel alone, there are millions of us. Flute in the last make it even better.
That flute tho.
Sent here after loving the "I Wish I Could" video.. I always loved TOKIMONSTA, but just listened to her music, had no clue about her somewhat recent ordeal.. She is amazing and I am so happy for her recovery from some scary stuff
I have the same disease as Jennifer. I had the same surgery as she did but only on my right side. I lost all sense of music as well for about music. It was an odd sensation for sure and I thought I was alone in this experience until I saw this documentary two months post surgery.
thou its a year late comment,
but man, i hope u recover and have a full functional sensation like her again. best wishes
This Documentary is so emotional idk why but the vibes the voiceovers all made me kinda emotional. @netflix can ya'll do a Documentary about frequencies? For example the 432 Hz tone, that would be mad nice.
Goosebumps!!! My God...that opening theme song.. what the hell was that??!!
2:02
Netflix with comments!
I can't be the only one looking for the comment section on Netflix, and the realize there is no one there xD
as it should be...
I was so glad that the girl can finally make music again. Goddamnit Vox, even in documentary you're making me on edge.
2:20 Narrated by Carly Rae Jepsen?
Call me maybe?
Yeah, her voice absolutely suits the explanation!
she sounds like Nina dobrev
As an artist herself, who makes, writes and helps on producing her music, she really suits the narration here.
*_could be .. may be_*
When that song crept in at the beginning I cried.
Loving the explained series. Beautiful, nice jobs Vox+Netflix people!
This is a TOKiMONSTA appreciation comment.
having carly rae jepsen narrate this is a great choice
Min 2:52 is not music! It is the Islamic call for prayer! Please, educate yourself, Netflix!
Holy shit, I listened to Tokimonsta so much back in college. Hearing her story in this was so cool!
Favorite episode from explained! Tokimonsta is the goat :)
we must *TEACH MUSIC in schools* with as much EMPHASIS as Math or Science
Only this way we can build a better & humane civilization
And art
Carly Rae Jepsen narrates. Perfect.
So Carly Rae Jepsen is the narrator, right?
exactly!
*_could be .. may be_*
@@alricbraganza | ;-P
Best series on Netflix
I remember when I watched Tom 10 seconds in real life (Not in the Adam Sandler's movie) and he couldn't remember a thing for more than 10 seconds but he could play and remember a 2 or 3 minutes song, that proofs how beautiful and powerful music really is :)
quite a few mistakes in this.
7:16 - the audio is a "harmonic minor scale" but the animation shows a 'phyrigian' scale, which is not what we hear. the scale we heard would have both the second and seventh lines move to be at the same level as the major scale. also using a harmonic minor scale is not a great example if you're trying to objectively show the difference between major and minor sounds, a "natural minor" scale would accomplish this better since you don't have to change any notes(using the "relative minor').
9:02 - Major isn't nessecarily associated with "happy feelings." It has a *brightness* to it but that doesn't nessecarily translate to happy. take for example the a section of duke ellington's 'caravan,' which chills on one (major) C7 chord. You'd probably think of it as "suspenseful, dramatic, eerie" rather than 'happy.' But it is still thought of as *bright*. Just one of the many ways chords can work, and always depends on the broader context.
10:20 - the last 2 notes quite noticeably rise, the animation shows them as falling.
the animation also shows each note falling as lower than the previous, but the note is repeated.
10:23 - the Beatles and Bob Dylan basslines are not the "exact same bassline" as the example you depicted before. it falls in semitones, rather than diatonically within the key, like Hit the Road Jack and Lamento della Ninfa do.
But love the video, 'specially the evolution discussion.
that chart is really beautiful can we get it as wallpaper
0:42 ah yes, as Adam Neely says, "repetition legitimizes".
2:21 another Adam Neely reference? You had my interest, but now you have my attention.
no wonder guys with guitar get all the action.
Adam Neely doesn't know the secret reason why birds don't have relative pitch. I answer this in my new upload. I like Adam but he's mind controlled by Western music tuning. haha
I watched this in class and now I feel like watching it at home and here I am watching it at home again
Vox is on another level
Who else couldn't focus on what the people were saying as they were getting into all the tunes too much 😂😂. Like seriously, any constant beat or nice melody lures me in. And that raindrop thing at the beginning, I was hearing music like 3 seconds in.
Did anyone else not see that coming 1:25?🤣 hes goood
Who else saw "Narrated by: Carly Rae Jepsen" at 2:20, paused, and searched for "Call Me Maybe"? :)
Glad they got some experts in on this one. Go Tori on the gangsa semarandana!
i just got a rescue puppy, i was looking for a name . I am totally naming him Oscar. Its hard to find inspiration but Oscar is a classic name for a smart Dachshund name.
@@PHlophev Lechiffresix six
In the 60s music was at its peak but ALL OF 70s funk music IS AND WILL BE HISTORICAL BEYOND OUR TIME!
I can agree with that. So creative
You guys posted so much stuff all at once, very nice.
no wonder guys with guitar get all the action.
:-)
that's a myth unfortunately...
@@Azafell ikr
Says who
@@Kasyom your daddy
2:52 was that a mosque? You know there is no music there
Thanks for sharing all the videos with no ads!
its super cool how they made the water droplets apart of the background music
This Netflix series is awesome!
8:07 - Crab rave! 🦀🦀🦀
Well done.
*I watch this show for the epic theme song and voices playing in the background only.. TRUE STORY*
Wow haven't heard from CRJ in a while!!
She just released Dedicated Side B, a companion album to Dedicated, which she dropped last year.
She's been releasing music, albeit, she's not on mainstream anymore.
What about Hazrat Inyat Khan's quote from "The mysticism of music & the power of the word"?. "Rhythm, when of an eve nature, can be felt by every living thing". I guess that means they can feel the rhythm but not react to it IN rhytm
Ain't a fool made a cat purr love this.
That documentary was so interesting... Could listen to that brain surgeon all day
Music is really amazing!
Song at 8:08?
What's the name of the piece that sounds in minute 13:41?
Mozart's Piano Concerto no. 21?
It's not the full concerto - it's the second Andante movement in Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K. 467. This II. movement is known in itself as "the Elvira Madigan theme" due to an excellent Swedish 1967 movie.
I was looking for this too! Thank you!
Whats the song that started in @13:54? Thanks in advance
you are my sunshine
Netflix is better than other streaming chards
💚🌻 Music heals by increasing our frequency vibration.
The theme song of this series is the best
The opening song is: Explained - Theme Song by Jackson Greenberg.
Who else is being forced to watch this by your teachers?
Lmao me
Alex
I wish i had a good teacher like yours
really lol
I'm a teacher getting ready to make my kids watch this 😂
I wanted my teachers to watch "explained"
The theme song is just dope
Vox official music
Joy is music!
Episode on the presidency and domestication would be cool
we're all result of vibrations...\
The Professor yes but that happened due to vibration in quantum strings so..
@@nicevid Let ur imagination go further mate...\
Light is always here.
megrez 1927, it has not always been same.... light came too late after matter and vibrations but now we need not worry as it’ll always be with us ..illuminate us, enlighten us, evolve us.
ॐ असतो मा सद्गमय ।
तमसो मा ज्योतिर्गमय ।
मृत्योर्मा अमृतं गमय ।
(Lead me from the asat to the sat.
Lead me from darkness to light.
Lead me from death to immortality
Om Peace Peace Peace.)
@@sarangmt Very true my friend....agreed 100%.
do anyone know the violin / backgroud sound in 1:10 ?
Nur Muhammad Norman That’s a flute.
One of my favourite songs!
I love this episode
Please can anyone help me with the name of the background music at 13:44
Was it supposed to make me cry when that congresswoman could sing? Because it did
what is the name of the classical song at 16:00?
Mozart's piano concerto n.21 in C major ''elvira madigan''' andante
Still my guitar gently weeps
these people are actually simple man ... you know this
This is so cool
Ed Sheeran and Marvin Gaye have entered the chat 9:40
this is great, but whats up with plugging a moog into a guitar amplifier?
super chido ojala hagan mas asi
Why would you dislike this
Can't for the life of me understand that
vox is huge
Wow I didn’t know Netflix posted full episodes on UA-cam
Saw a funny dance for a school shooting on UA-cam and wanted to know where it’s from.
PLease tell me the music name at 13:55?
" You are my sunshine "
This episode is where I started questioning this series' credibility.
The chord progression of The house of the rising sun (you can hear it at 10:08) is not at all the same as the other examples. Neither is While my guitar gently weeps (10:22). These two are almost identical in chord progression (with a slight difference), but not "the exact same bass line" as advertised here.
Saying "composer after composer has been using the exact same bass line.." is true, but you didn't get all of your examples right. That's just lazy fact checking, and for a company with your resources, Netflix, you could afford someone who knows music theory to fact check your episodes.
was looking for this comment
Looking for an explanation of what music is, I find no logical answer.
Why?
Because we take it for granted.
My definition of music is that it is a variation of human speech, vocal or instrumental.
That is the part of the brain that processes it.
Of course like speech it contains everything in human life, emotions, moods, questions, answers, statements, violence, everything.
The current explanations focusses on How this is done, but nor What it is..
Need to do an episode on education!!!
Hey can someone help me with a school asignment for this what is darwins evolutionary explanation for music??!
I love that this is narrated by Carly Rae Jepsen 😂❤
That neurosurgeon, dr gary steignberg, is a hero! 🦸♂️
wow why i cant find this on my netflix? is it only uploaded on youtube?🤔
Music in my Life
why did everyone replay 8:23 whats wrong with the monkey like the replay bar skyrockets at that second
People who say that they dont listen to music and have no favorite genre or band are lying or from another species.
What if we humans don’t understand the music that other animals understand like frequencies which are unheard to humans 🧐
true ... whales & dolphins have their own music ... & not even mentioning birds !
and some backwards religions have the nerves to make music forbidden
"Music was made to honor God!"
Why is rated tv-ma ????
i heard gamelan. okay i’m in.
So does everyone of us have to do this for our music lesson?
Yet people say we were not created. yes all of that is coincidence.
I just can’t stop I’m sorry
who watched this series on quarantine sesh?